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- åPurpose
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- As its name suggests, Menu Grabber reaches out to another application
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- and grabs a copy of its menu bar. When you select an item from a grabbed
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- menu, or press its Command-key equivalent, Menu Grabber sends a
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- “Menu event” to the target application, simulating a menu selection in
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- that application.
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- The target application can be on your machine or on any machine on your
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- AppleTalk network, but it must be a machine equipped with the Menu
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- Events extension. Any “high-level-event-aware” application (one that
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- supports program linking) can be a target, even if it is not designed to be
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- scriptable. With some limitations, Menu Grabber gives you a way to
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- control applications on other machines which you would not otherwise
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- have.
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- NOTE: The help file for the Menu Events extension contains a complete
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- description of the extension, the Apple events which it supports, and
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- some usage suggestions for programmers.
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- åWho Can Use Menu Grabber?
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- Any Macintosh running System 7.0 or later can use Menu Grabber.
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- Because it’s an application, and not a system extension, it shouldn’t
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- conflict with your other programs.
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- It is not necessary to have the Menu Events extension installed on the
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- machine where you use Menu Grabber to target applications on another
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- machine.
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- Menu Grabber can be placed on an AppleShare file server, where any
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- number of users can access it simultaneously.
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